Far East reporters propose Gold Star award for President Putin

A group of journalists have lodged an official proposal to award Vladimir Putin with the honorary title Hero of Russia for his uncompromising defense of the national interest and support of ethnic Russians as well as for supporting the freedom of speech.

The move has been initiated by Konstantin Pronyakin from the city
of Khabarovsk, a correspondent with the popular nationwide daily
Moskovsky Komsomolets.

Pronyakin says that his letter was also signed by journalists
from Khabarovsk Region, Yakutiya, Amur and Magadan Regions, and
also the Jewish Autonomous District – all in the Russian Far
East.

In the letter that was forwarded to the pro-Putin political
movement All-Russian Popular Front, the journalists ask top
parliamentary officials – State Duma Speaker Sergey Naryshkin and
upper house Chairwoman Valentina Matviyenko – with a request to
award Vladimir Putin the Hero of Russia title. It is the highest
honorary title of the Russian Federation.

The backers of the initiative claim that Putin deserves this
because of his “heroic decision made in difficult times to
support the compatriots and brotherly nations of the Crimean
Peninsula,” expressed in the signing of the Federal law on
the accession of the Crimean Republic and the Sevastopol city
into the Russian Federation.

The journalists also praise Putin’s input into maintaining
Russia’s territorial integrity, his solid stance in defending
Russia’s national interests on the international arena and the
“declaration of the freedom of expression within the
framework of the law.”

The Hero of Russia title was instituted in 1992 and is modeled on
the Hero of the Soviet Union title that existed in the USSR from
1934. Hero of Russia and the Labor Hero of Russia are two top
honorary titles in the Russian Federation – the laureates are
given special Gold Star medals and their bronze busts can be
installed in their home regions.

Vladimir Putin has several state awards from Russia and foreign
nations with the highest being the Order of Merit received in
1996. Neither the president nor his administration have yet
commented on the journalists’ letter, which was published in the
government daily Rossiiskaya Gazeta on Wednesday.

One of Far Eastern politicians, the head of the Liberal
Democratic caucus in the Khabarovsk Regional Legislature,
Vyacheslav Furgal, called the reporters’ motion
“unethical” in press comments. He noted that
representatives of the mass media as “the Fourth Estate”
must remain unbiased and distanced from all political
developments in the country. At the same time, Furgal agreed that
Putin definitely deserved the honorary title.